Feminist Designer: On the Personal and the Political in Design

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Product Details
Price
$29.95  $27.85
Publisher
MIT Press
Publish Date
Pages
264
Dimensions
7.0 X 10.1 X 0.7 inches | 1.75 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780262048422

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About the Author
Alison Place is a designer, educator, and researcher who practices feminism through design. She is Assistant Professor of Graphic Design in the School of Art at the University of Arkansas.
Reviews
Included in Fast Company's "5 essential design books to read this fall"

"What is the relationship between feminist theory and design practice? This is the question that frames the essays, conversations, and case studies that designer and educator Alison Place has put together here. Moving beyond narrow questions of representation and inclusion, Feminist Designer instead asks how we design and why. In a work of theory that is also accessible, Place and her contributors make the case that feminist theory--and feminism more generally--provides an opportunity to interrogate the role of power, knowledge, care, community, and more in the designed systems and artifacts that surround us."
--Fast Company

"The book looks at all these mediations through a feminist lens, asking that designers, and anyone engaged with design (which is all of us) be alert to the implicit bias in our designed world, and its entanglement in power structures and oppressive systems. The book, which includes work from 43 contributors across 16 countries, answers how to make design socially beneficial, looking at graphic, interior, exhibition, AI, product, disability, and design education, demanding an examination of the ways designed objects and systems reinforce or undermine oppression. The book is divided into six thematic chapters: power, knowledge, care, plurality, liberation, and community."
--The Boston Globe

"This book will be an invaluable resource for design educators and practitioners, challenging what we thought we knew while opening new possibilities for being and designing"
--Metropolis